Quote: (06-11-2017 01:48 PM)YoungBlade Wrote:
So landmass = significance? Nevermind the crusades against the Finns and Balts, as well as the total annihilation of the Prussians, only the size of the land matters, despite the fact that at the time "Russia" was the duchy of Novgorod and few other cities, with the mongols holding the rest, as the vast majority of what you're calling Russia lies in Asia.
Landmass, population, influence and weight on European history. Russia covers
over one third of Europe, and 78% of its population is in Europe. Do you really want to compare the Baltics and Finland to France or Russia? Is this a real argument you're trying to make here?
Quote:Quote:
And lastly, you continue to conflate paganism and luciferianism and kabbalah. The worldviews are entirely separate. A few modern luciferians take some pagan symbols, but does that make them pagan? Would you call them christians for taking St. Peter's Cross? Even your remark on Isis simply proves most Europeans were pagan, not Christian.
Europeans were Christian for one to two millenia, it's a central part of European identity, Christianity was shaped by Europe and vice versa. The only people who still perform pagan ritual sacrifices and blood offerings today are pagan globalists, the rest have been civilized and no longer perform those kinds of barbaric religious rituals. And modern pagans are the ones LARPing here, they're basically new agers weened on second rate globalist mass media cultural products like death metal or GOT.
Quote:Quote:
You're also cherrypicking a single hospice (funded by the duke of Beaune, not the Church) in a city, which means "the poor" are urbanites, not the peasantry, which reside in the countryside.
Wrong on both counts, Beaune is a small town, the Hospices catered to the whole region. They were run by Catholic nuns, and drew from the entire region, and were a part of a network of hospitals across Burgundy run by the clergy:
"The Hospices de Beaune received the first patient on 1 January 1452. Elderly, disabled and sick people, with orphans, women about to give birth and the destitute have all been uninterruptedly welcomed for treatment and refuge from the Middle Ages until today. This Catholic institution focused on healing both the body and spirit of its patients.
Over the centuries,
the hospital radiated outwards, grouping with similar establishments in the surrounding villages of Pommard, Nolay, Meursault. Many donations - farms, property, woods, works of art and of course vineyards - were made to it, by grateful families and generous benefactors. The institution is one of the best and oldest examples of historical, philanthropic, and wine-producing heritage, and has become linked with the economic and cultural life of Burgundy."
The clergy run public hospitals open to the public across the country, not just in Burgundy, this was the model in France and across many European nations. Historians like Marion Sigault have documented this.
and we're back:
turkish actress Meryem Uzerli
from Bengladesh, Mehjabin Chowdhury